….::: VOX POPULI :::….
“Ministers… cannot in any country be uninfluenced by the voice of the people.”
Vox Populi (Latin for “Voice of the People”) aims to provide useful information on interactive communication technologies and social networking tools that can be used by government officials to improve services to citizens and taxpayers. This is the voice of Government 2.0.
24th
SEP
Lots of Gov 2.0 Potential in Twitter Geolocation
Posted by Mark Headd under Development Tools, Open Government, Twitter
So the new Twitter hotness will be the ability to add locational data to individual Tweets - not sure on exactly when this new feature will go live, but it will require someone wishing to add locational data to their tweets to:
- Explicitly opt in to this feature by changing their Twitter account settings.
- Utilize a Twitter client that is location aware, and can add lat/long to specific Tweets.
Twitter currently has some limited geolocation support that utilizes the account-level location field, but there is no validation on what is entered, so it is not terribly reliable.

The imminent support for “geo-Tweets” holds enormous potential for governments if you think of Twitter as another communications channel that citizens can use to interact with government. (Clearly, I do.)
Many government services are tied to a specific location - parks, libraries, motor vehicle offices, unemployment offices, etc. - and there are lots of good examples of information that governments generate that are location-specific - road closures and construction delays, pollution sites, crime incidents, etc.
As the application I built to query legislative information from the NY Senate Open Leg API demonstrates, Twitter can be used as a power application interface. It’s easy to use, available to people on a variety of devices and relatively easy for governments to set up. With the addition of locational data, Twitter will become an even more powerful interface for citizens to use when interacting with Governments.
Now, if a citizen wants to use Twitter to find out the hours of operations of libraries in their city or town, they can get an answer that is specifically tailored to their location - they can get a response back from a government application telling them the hours (and the address) of the library closest to their current location.
Governments need to think about Twitter as an interface to their services and applications - one that will soon be able to support location-specific data and responses. There is a lot of potential here for those interested in advancing Gov 2.0.
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September 24, 2009 -
Development Tools, Open Government, Twitter -
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